Maggie felt so fascinated by this, she knelt, gazed deep into the heart of the earth, struggling to see the source of light.
Her breath fogged the glassy surface, and she rubbed her arm over the condensation, wiping it away. She held her breath, staring deep into the ground, watching.
There, below the glass, she saw movement-small figures walking. She recognized herself, standing in a green field. Gallen held her, dressed all in the black of a Lord Protector, clinging to her for support, as if terribly ill. Both of them gazed up at the horizon expectantly, nervously, and something dark wriggled there, something black and horrible.
Suddenly a dronon Vanquisher hurtled toward them. Its wings rumbled, and it held its battle arms high for attack. It felled Gallen in one deadly stroke, then hurtled past. Maggie shrieked and leapt, fearing the Vanquisher would burst from the earth.
Yet nothing came for her. Maggie stood on the plain of glass, backing from that horrible spot in the ground. Certainty filled her: it is coming. It is coming for me. Terror filled her.
She gazed into the ground, hoping to see more. Around her, light shifted from white to various colors. It was as if bubbles began rising from the ground, bubbles of color that burst against the air, then dissipated. Within each bubble she saw a scene, so that no scene remained for more than a split second-she saw herself as a child, her mother comforting her after a fall; in another place, she sat outside the circle of fire at Mahoney’s Inn while old John Mahoney himself led the local fishermen in a rousing song; in another scene, she piled dung in a rich man’s garden back in Clere, while Father Heany stood on, watching; in another she was an infant, and her father tossed her in the air.
It was as if moments of her life were surfacing, moments she’d forgotten, moments half-remembered, moments she had not yet seen-all foaming over, here for her to see.
In one bubble, she and Gallen lay dead while a dronon Vanquisher tore at their corpses.
“Save me! Why doesn’t someone save me?” Maggie shouted, her heart drumming. She knew this was no vain threat.
Then Maggie heard a dim whispering voice, “We are here.”
As if on its own volition, her chin tilted up, and she saw a light, a green flame, hurtling through the midnight skies like a comet.
As it neared, the flame enlarged, till for a moment she thought she saw an X in the sky. As it drew close, she saw it was a bird, a great bird of light, flying on wings of green fire.
“I hear you,” a voice whispered. “I come.”
The bird of light was upon her, so close she could touch it. The Qualeewooh was a creature of flame, the darkest emerald. It wore a spirit mask, and Maggie recognized the whorls and pictographs engraved there.
A bird six thousand years dead. On the horizon behind it, flocks of Qualeewoohs, dazzling like stars, rushed toward her.
Maggie shoved the mask from her face so hard it clattered to the floor, and she leapt up on the bed, suddenly afraid the bird of her vision would come for her.
She stood a long ten minutes, scared witless. Everything she’d seen was clearly impossible. Yet she had felt the coolness of the smooth earth, had seen the lights and heard voices. She could no more deny it than deny her own existence.
It seemed impossible.
Magic. The Qualeewoohs’ technology was so different from man’s, she’d have thought it magic. Yet Maggie knew she’d seen the owner of that mask. He lived, beyond human understanding, in a place where past and present fused with future. And he is coming. He-she felt certain this Qualeewooh was male-had promised to come, and others were coming with it.
Maggie stood on the bed, trembling so badly she finally let herself collapse, fall to the bed, and curl in a ball to think.
She wasn’t certain. She wasn’t certain what she’d heard and seen. It all seemed too incredible, so far outside her experience she could not put faith in it. She realized she had not physically “spoken” to anyone in the vision. Her mouth had not moved, her tongue had not formed words.
Her plea for help had been the cry of her soul, of something so deep within her, her bones would have screamed though her mouth was struck silent.
And the bird of light had not spoken. It had not said, “I come.” it had said both less and more, speaking mind to mind. It had said, “I come. We come. It comes.”
What did that mean? We come to save you? The future comes? Was the creature counseling her to prepare for the inevitable?
All of this seemed right, she decided. And more.
Everything inside her cried out to put the mask back on, to commune with this creature till she gained complete understanding. But she recalled Felph’s warnings. Those who wore the masks too much faced madness.
She’d met one of those unfortunate souls at Felph’s party. Not only had he gained no understanding from the masks, he’d lost touch with reality.
So Maggie curled in a ball for two long hours till she calmed. I can’t let this mask control me, she decided. I can’t let it influence me. If the vision of the Vanquisher I saw lies in my future, who knows when it will come? I cannot spend my life running from it. And perhaps it means nothing. Perhaps it is but one possible future.
Once Maggie got up, she decided to throw herself into work, take her mind off the mask and its strange message. She spent the morning working in Felph’s technological wing. The events of last night had unnerved her-the way Zeus had groped her, the way she’d found herself considering the extremes she might have to go to in order to free Felph’s children. She’d even fantasized about killing Felph, and that notion seemed so … irrational.
This morning she needed to get away from Zeus, think about this in the clear light of day. She entered the palace’s technological wing under the guise of planning to download some of the memory crystals from her mantle into Felph’s system, but she stayed long after she finished, studying Felph’s files. His security systems were hopelessly inadequate to keep her off his terminals.
The information she found disturbed her. Security in the palace was nonexistent. Last night Zeus talked longingly of his hope for escape. Before studying the files, Maggie had imagined that Felph must have killer droids circling the palace. Though Felph did have four security droids posted outside, he hadn’t programmed them to keep his children in, nor to keep strangers off the grounds. They only destroyed stray predators.
On reflection, Maggie saw that Felph didn’t need any high-security measures. His primary defense was simpler than killer droids: it was the vast seething desert, separating his oasis from any tangle within three hundred kilometers.
So Zeus’s fears seemed unwarranted. Leaving the palace would be as simple as flying out. Felph’s droids cared for dozens of florafeems; they would accept any human request for use of the beasts. A quick check of the beast handlers’ memory showed that Zeus himself often took the florafeems to visit Devil’s Bunghole.
Maggie thought, But Zeus intimated to me last night that he’d never left the palace, that Lord Felph held him prisoner. Maggie retrieved video images the droids had filed of Zeus’s most recent trips. Maggie confirmed that the young man had been lying.
What she found left Maggie heartsick. She’d suspected that Felph was some kind of monster. Now she realized he was nothing more than an old man, an errant old man who had long ago fled society, and yet had not given up on mankind. She’d judged him harshly, more harshly than one person should ever judge another.
Yet Zeus had lied to her. Maggie recalled being the victim of hundreds of seduction attempts in past lives-many of which failed, some of which succeeded. Just as often, she’d made such attempts. But never had she run across someone like Zeus-handsome, clever, manipulative, rife with pheromones, and apparently lacking any moral compunctions whatsoever.